Here is a selection of photographs
of my previous cars (Apart from the one I was too embarrassed to take a
photo of!)

Ford
Escort

My First car in 1986 was a Ford
Escort Mk1 1100L (1968). I loved this car, but rust kept eating
it. It had floors sponsored by Hotpoint and Zanussi (panels from old
washing machine proved useful !!) The strut tops rusted badly as did
the chassis and the chap who always welded my car for me told me the best
thing I could do with it is use it as a chicken shed and keep his chickens
dry. I did laugh at the word dry!! The engine and rostyle
wheels were sold and the body was given to the scrap man :o(

Ford Fiesta

Ok, I got a loan to go out and get a sensible
car. The problem was that I don't know what sensible is! When
I saw this car advertised I thought it looked like a lot of fun! It
started life as a bog standard Ford Fiesta Festival 1.1, but had been
quite modified with a bigger tuned engine, a roll cage, RS Alloys, Spots
lights and a bizarre paint job by its current owner. In my eyes it
was a sensible car..... for country lanes etc.

Fiat Strada

I bought it for £50 with 3 months tax. It
was cheaper to buy a car than hire one at the time. We were planning
on going camping in Weston Supermare for a week and the Fiesta was in
bits, so I needed a car quick. My brother knew someone down the
local pub who was selling a car for £50. I didn't really look at
the car, I just handed over the money. The car had some unique
features. The interior had been redesigned...... by the previous
owners dog. The seats were slashed (designer style), most if the
gear knob had been chewed, the carpet had more hair on it than the dog
itself! The car was air conditioned.... well lets just say it had a
few holes where the tin worm had got hungry. Saying that we drove
the car to Weston Supermare without any problems and it drove quite
well. The performance on it was quite good, but I put that down to
the fact that the car had been lighted (bits just dropped off)

Sadly there are no pictures of the Green
Strada. I sold the car on the a scrap dealer for £55! Bonus!!

Vauxhall Chevette

The Vauxhall Chevette was my next great
purchase. I decided that I needed a good reliable car and was
prepared to spend a little more money this time. So a whopping £75 later I
had a great little estate car. The problem was that it had been
involved in a rear end smash, so a friend of mine kindly bashed out the
rear valance and we fitted a second hand tail gate. The Chevette was
a superb motor, I did many trouble free miles in it driving all around
England.

On the first day of camping in Cornwall, there
were major floods and one of the rivers overflowed and block the entrance
through to the camp site in Bude, so I ignored everyone's warning
and drove through the flooded road. There was water entering
the car and flapping over the top of the bonnet. Remarkably we made
it to the other side before the alternator and other electrics packed up
and the car stalled. After a week of jump starting/push starting the Chevette every morning, I
finally drove home and replaced the alternator and the car lasted until I
traded it in.

Ford Orion

Well, I traded in the Vauxhall Chevette for the
Ford Orion 1.6. I payed at total of £500 for the Orion. It
looked quite nice and I had never had a four door before. The engine
was good, but soon the wheel arches and front and rear valances and cross
members started to rust along with the sills. I think it was the
first car that I could actually hear what the passengers were saying while I was
driving.

Fiat X/19

I am a sucker for punishment, a friend told me
about a new project car that was for sale locally.
I decided to go and have a look. I really liked the 1979 Fiat X/19
when I first saw it and the owner only wanted £200. My brain told
me that the Fiat was totally impractical for me and it needed a lot of
welding and I should walk away.... but what does my brain know
anyway? I bought the car there and then!

A good friend of mine
said welding wouldn't be a problem as he had a Mig welder. We
set about the body work, and realised that as we dug deeper, we would find
lots more of the famous Fiat tin worm. There was certainly more
welding involved than either of us expected! At the end of it we
decided to repaint the car as it looked too much like a patch work
quilt. My friend Rich had got some paint left over, so he resprayed
the car for me. The engine was only a 1.3 litre but it motored very
well and road holding was superb. I recarpeted the floors and bought
some cheap seat covers to hide the late seventies orange and brown stripy
seats. I was pleased with the overall effect.

Within about six
months of owning the car went pair shaped, I had intermittent wipers, the
sort that worked when they felt like it, pop up head lights that didn't
pop up, the engine started over heating and lots of other little gremlins
crept in, so I decided it was time for the Fiat to go, which was a shame
because I really did enjoy driving it.

Ford Escort Van

With the Fiat on the blink, I was offered the
ex-company van. It was as basic as it comes, there were no plush
carpets, just plastic matting, but it was reliable and I could just chuck
all my camping gear in the back. I can't really say anything bad
about the Escort van other than it was totally boring to drive. I
needed a new challenge, something that would put a smile on my face while
driving. Before long a Scimitar GTE was on my "To Get"
list.

Reliant Kitten

Well as you know, I did buy a 1969 Reliant
Scimitar GTE and had been running it daily for a couple of years. I
thought that buying a smaller car to do the general running around in
would be a great idea to save on petrol costs.

While I was having
some work done on my Scimitar there was a Reliant Kitten parked
outside. The owner said its for sale! There was no way I could
drive two cars home, so the next day I hired a trailer and towed the
Kitten back home.

Although the Kitten was great fun to drive and
being only 850cc it was much cheaper on fuel, it was actually dearer to
keep as it wasn't tax exempt and insurance costs were much higher than my
3 litre Scimitar. Certain spares were getting difficult to obtain
too, so sadly it had to go. If the 25 years rolling tax exemption
rule comes back in then I would definitely be tempted to get another one
just for fun!

Fiat Seicento

Well I always said I would never buy a new car,
but in August 2003 I bought the perfect little run around that money could
buy. I bought the Fiat Seicento 1.1 brand new from a local Fiat
dealer and bought it on a 3 year plan, which worked out cheaper than what
I was paying for fuel in the Scimitar on a monthly basis!

I must say that its great getting into a
car without having to demist all the inside windows, get fantastic heat
from the heater, have headlights that let you see the road in the
dark.

Am I going to get rid of the Scimitar I here you
ask?

No, the Scimitar still brings a bloody great
smile to my face when I'm driving it, I can cope with clearing the mist
off the screen, I wear a wooly jumper to keep warm in winter and I eat
more carrots to see in the dark... that's half the fun of classic
cars!!!

I still own the Fiat today and it's only covered
19,000 miles in just over 3 years as I much prefer to use the Scimitar for
long journeys!